"The Walking Dead" Marathon (11 a.m. to 12 midnight Est on AMC)
If you've missed out on the critically-acclaimed zombie drama or are just trying to avoid all of the other soulless, dead-eyed beings that congregate on New Year's Eve, it's your lucky night: AMC is re-airing "The Walking Dead" in its entirety, from the premiere episode to the recently-aired midseason finale. It's a gory way to celebrate 2012, but it's probably less messy than going out for the night.
"Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2012" (8 p.m. to 2:13 a.m. Est on ABC)
Those intro tradition can keep it locked on the alphabet network for nearly 5.5 hours of bi-coastal New Year's festivities, presided over by the eponymous Dick Clark and the ever-present Ryan Seacrest. Things kick off at 8 p.m. with "New Year's Rockin' Eve: The 40th Anniversary Party," hosted by Jenny McCarthy in Times Square and Fergie in Los Angeles.
If you've missed out on the critically-acclaimed zombie drama or are just trying to avoid all of the other soulless, dead-eyed beings that congregate on New Year's Eve, it's your lucky night: AMC is re-airing "The Walking Dead" in its entirety, from the premiere episode to the recently-aired midseason finale. It's a gory way to celebrate 2012, but it's probably less messy than going out for the night.
"Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve with Ryan Seacrest 2012" (8 p.m. to 2:13 a.m. Est on ABC)
Those intro tradition can keep it locked on the alphabet network for nearly 5.5 hours of bi-coastal New Year's festivities, presided over by the eponymous Dick Clark and the ever-present Ryan Seacrest. Things kick off at 8 p.m. with "New Year's Rockin' Eve: The 40th Anniversary Party," hosted by Jenny McCarthy in Times Square and Fergie in Los Angeles.
- 12/30/2011
- by The Huffington Post
- Aol TV.
Carson Daly is the first to acknowledge he has "weathered a few storms" in keeping his "Last Call" going.
The host of NBC's "The Voice" (and one-time ringmaster of MTV's "Trl") has changed his own late-late-night NBC show significantly over its 11 seasons. Now done as "guerrilla television" from a different site every night, it features chats with entertainers and politicians, and -- of great importance to Daly, also a weekday-morning Los Angeles radio personality -- performances by music acts that haven't had much TV exposure, as with Maroon 5 and Ray Lamontagne in their early days.
"After two guys in suits telling monologue jokes, by the time it gets to me, I'm just not that guy," Daly tells Zap2it. "I'm inspired by Charlie Rose, Tavis Smiley, Bob Costas and Greg Kinnear when he did 'Later.' This is the most liberating thing that's ever happened to me. I want...
The host of NBC's "The Voice" (and one-time ringmaster of MTV's "Trl") has changed his own late-late-night NBC show significantly over its 11 seasons. Now done as "guerrilla television" from a different site every night, it features chats with entertainers and politicians, and -- of great importance to Daly, also a weekday-morning Los Angeles radio personality -- performances by music acts that haven't had much TV exposure, as with Maroon 5 and Ray Lamontagne in their early days.
"After two guys in suits telling monologue jokes, by the time it gets to me, I'm just not that guy," Daly tells Zap2it. "I'm inspired by Charlie Rose, Tavis Smiley, Bob Costas and Greg Kinnear when he did 'Later.' This is the most liberating thing that's ever happened to me. I want...
- 11/30/2011
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
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